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J Infect Dis ; 2023 Mar 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2258515

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Targeted surveillance allows public health authorities to implement testing and isolation strategies when diagnostic resources are limited, and can be implemented via the consideration of social network topologies. Yet, it remains unclear how to implement such surveillance and control when network data are unavailable. METHODS: We evaluated the ability of socio-demographic proxies of degree centrality to guide prioritized testing of infected individuals compared to known degree centrality. Proxies were estimated via readily-available socio-demographic variables (age, gender, marital status, educational attainment, and household size). We simulated SARS-CoV-2 epidemics via a SEIR individual-based model on two contact networks from rural Madagascar to further test the applicability of these findings to low-resource contexts. RESULTS: Targeted testing using socio-demographic proxies performed similarly to targeted testing using known degree centralities. At a low testing capacity, using the proxies reduced the infection burden by 22-33% while using 20% fewer tests, compared to random testing. By comparison, using known degree centrality reduced the infection burden by 31-44% while using 26-29% fewer tests. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that incorporating social network information into epidemic control strategies is an effective countermeasure to low testing capacity and can be implemented via socio-demographic proxies when social network data are unavailable.

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